Baillie moved to
Canyon, California in 1960, working as a longshoreman and making short films.[1] He got a projector and
army surplus screen to put on shows in his backyard.
Chick Strand and
Ernest Callenbach became involved with the exhibition program, known as
Canyon Cinema, and eventually they began holding screenings around the
Bay Area.[2]
His body of cinematic work includes Quick Billy, To Parsifal, Mass for the Dakota Sioux, Castro Street, All My Life, Valentin de las Sierras, and Tung.
Personal life
Baillie married Lorie Apit in 1986. They had two children, Wind Gwladys Baillie and Keith Kenneth Baillie. Baillie died on April 10, 2020, in
Camano Island, Washington.[1]
Legacy
In 1991, he was the recipient of AFI's Maya Deren Independent Film and Video Artists Award.[4][5]
His 1966 short film Castro Street was selected in 1992 for the United States
National Film Registry.
In 2012, Stanford University acquired Baillie's archives and the archives of Canyon Cinema.[3] The
Academy Film Archive has preserved a number of Bruce Baillie's films, including Castro Street, Still Life, Cherry Yogurt, Little Girl, Roslyn Romance (Is It Really True?), and Quick Billy Rolls.[6]
His films influenced
George Lucas, who would attend screenings of Canyon Cinema in his youth.[7]
Filmography
On Sundays (1960–1961)
David Lynn's Sculpture (1961, unfinished)
Mr. Hayashi (1961)
The Gymnasts (1961)
Friend Fleeing (1962)
Everyman (1962)
News #3 (1962)
Have You Thought of Talking to the Director? (1962)